Six questions about the French elections

Will France elect far right candidate Marine Le Pen or far left candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon? Or will the country vote for a more conventional choice?

Popular candidates for the 2017 presidential election (from left): Fillon, Macron, Melenchon, Le Pen and Hamon get ready to debate on March 20, 2017.

Popular candidates for the 2017 presidential election (from left): Fillon, Macron, Melenchon, Le Pen and Hamon get ready to debate on March 20, 2017. Source: Reuters: Patrick Kovarik

As France goes to the polls to elect a new president, observers are wondering if the vote will follow a populist trend that led to  and .

Here are a few important things to know about the upcoming vote, as explained by Joshua Cole, an American scholar of .

1. How does the French presidential electoral process work? Prospective candidates must gather 500 signatures of support from French elected officials and have their candidacy approved by the Constitutional Court. A presidential term is five years, and all citizens 18 years and older can vote. This year the first round of voting is on April 23. If no candidate gets more than 50 percent, there will be a second-round runoff between the top two candidates on May 7.

2. Is president an important job in France? The prime minister is the head of the French government, but the president outranks the prime minister and has important powers in national defense and foreign relations.

The president also chooses the prime minister from the majority party in parliament. Occasionally, the president is forced to choose a prime minister from a different party than his or her own. This is called “cohabitation.” This year, the legislative elections will be in two rounds on June 11 and 18.

3. Who are the most popular candidates for president? Eleven  are running, with five seen as the main contenders. Two candidates are leading the  Marine Le Pen of the extreme right-wing National Front and Emmanuel Macron, a centrist and former economics minister, who is not associated with a traditional party.

Surprisingly, the candidates from the  who have dominated presidential politics for almost 40 years – the Republicans and the Socialists – are seen as unlikely to make the second round. Republican François Fillon has been hobbled by  Socialist Bénoit Hamon has found little traction among voters tired of the current socialist president, François Hollande.

A candidate from the far left, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, has seen his  of making the second round improve in recent days.

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4. France has been under a nationwide state of emergency since November of 2015. Is security a big issue? Multiple terrorist attacks in 2015-2016 have made security more important than ever.  gives the president the power to declare a state of emergency and then exercise executive and legislative powers simultaneously, ruling directly by decree. Given the likelihood of more terrorist attacks, this possibility has received a great deal of attention of late. A group of lawyers and jurists recently published a  arguing that the Constitution gives too much power to the presidency and that electing Le Pen was a danger to French democracy.
A national employment agency in the suburbs of Paris.
A national employment agency in the suburbs of Paris. Source: Reuters: Gonzalo Fuentes
5. During the 2012 election, some said then-President Nicolas Sarkozy was afraid to visit immigrant neighborhoods. How are these so-called “banlieues” playing into the election this time?

The  are zones of economic and cultural exclusion, where problems of chronic unemployment are concentrated. Not all French Muslims (about 8 percent of the ) live in the banlieues, but some banlieues have large Muslim populations. Le Pen’s campaign painted the banlieues as zones of failed assimilation and a  to France, blaming the residents for their own isolation.

6. What are the chances Le Pen will win? Le Pen is popular among many , who seem not to be bothered by the National Front’s  with racism and anti-Semitism. She is also supported by those who are opposed to . Most  say a second-round runoff between Le Pen and Macron is likely, and that Macron will win this match-up. With more than a third of the  saying they’re undecided on whom to vote for in the second round, the result may end up being much closer than predicted.

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4 min read
Published 18 April 2017 1:52pm
Updated 27 April 2017 1:09pm
By Joshua Cole
Source: The Conversation


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